Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Love as Spiritual Practice, Not Transaction

Reframing communication in love as a discipline of presence, attention, and mutual awakening rather than need-fulfillment or exchange.

Mira
Why It Matters

For Mirabai, loving Krishna was not a transaction—she did not expect reward or reciprocation in conventional terms. Love was her practice, her path to transformation, her way of touching the divine. This concept invites a fundamental reframing: love communication is not primarily about getting your needs met, winning arguments, or maintaining comfort. It is a spiritual discipline—a practice of showing up, paying attention, tolerating vulnerability, learning forgiveness, and allowing another person to change you. From this perspective, a difficult conversation becomes not a threat but an opportunity to practice honesty and compassion. A period of disconnection becomes a chance to examine how you love and where you've grown defended. A partner's difference becomes a mirror for your own rigidity. This doesn't mean accepting harm or abandoning boundaries. Rather, it means approaching the relationship as sacred work—not to transform the other person but to offer your best self and be transformed in the encounter. Communication becomes less about strategic positioning and more about genuine inquiry: How do I love more truly? Where am I still defended? What is this person showing me about myself? This shift from transaction to practice changes everything, infusing ordinary moments with spiritual significance and depth.

Helpful guides
Mira
Love & Relationships
Peri
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